Lakshadweep - Transfer of power deliberations, and a brief history
There are many discussions these days about those remote
islands to the west of Malabar, namely Lakshadweep. I had written about the
caste quarrels out there and also some of its histories as connected to the
Cannanore Royalty and the Arakkal Beevi, many years ago. What really brought me
back to the subject were a number of news articles and forwards which appeared recently about
recent legislations which rightfully irritated its Moplah majority, so also press
reports as well as speeches mentioning the involvement of Sardar Patel, the
Mudaliars and Travancore in hoisting the tricolor at the Laccadives as well as
an apparent visit of a Pakistan vessel to the islands in 1947.
As you may be aware, there are three island archipelagos in
the region, the southernmost being the Chagos, then further North the Maldives
and closer to Malabar in longitude, the Laccadives. The Laccadives is thus some
27 islands (the name suggests a lakh - 100,000 islands in the archipelago, but
how the lakh was attached to the name has never been cleared up) just over 12
square miles in area. 10 of those are inhabited while the others are not. The
inhabited ones are Chetlat, Bitra, Kiltan, Kadmat, Amini, Agathi, Androth,
Kavrathi, Kalpeni and Maliku. There is a large gap between Kalpeni and Maliku (closer
to the Trivandrum longitude), separated by the 9-degree channel.
Then there is the legend of a search party sent out by the
Kolathiri Raja to search for the Cheraman Perumal who had gone to Mecca. As it
appears their ship capsized near the islands and the survivors were the first
settlers. In reality, all the Northern islands were settled by Moplahs of
Malabar, the Maliku island people seem to have some Sri Lanka or Male ancestry.
While a Malayalam dialect is the main spoken language in the Northern group,
the Maliku people speak a version of Sinhalese. It is also believed that
Buddhism and Hinduism predated the introduction of Islam, which was brought
over by an iterant preacher from Arabia named Ubaidullah (Mumbe mulliyaka –
First Musaliyar) circa 661AD who then married a local girl named Hamidat Bibi.
Their families and lines survive to this day. The islanders belong to the
Shafi’I Sunni sect compared to the majority in India who follow the Hanafi
traditions. The Tangals have much in common with the Hadrami sayyids and it is
likely that they were the representatives of these South Arabian clerical from the
Wâdi Hadramawt fanned out in those times to increase their followers.
Sulayman al-Tajir, 851 A.D refers to both groups
collectively, or to the Maldives alone, as DIbajat Al-Biruni (1030 A.D.)
divides the islands according to their chief products, into the Diva Kanbar
(Coir Islands, or Laccadives) and the Diva Kudha (Cowrie Islands, or the Maldives).
From a sailors plan, we can see that shipping
bound for Southern Arabia and the Red Sea from Malabar, as well as shipping
bound for the East Africa coast from Malabar, would pass close to the southern
reefs of the Laccadives; while, westbound shipping from the region of Goa
would pass close to the northernmost reef of the Laccadives.
Coconuts, coir and fishing were the main occupations and
means of livelihood. Some of the locals also freelanced for Arab ship owners as
shipping pilots in the region. Generally, historians of the past bunched the
Maldives and Laccadive archipelagoes into one, considering that the distance
between Maliku or Minicoy and the nearest Maldives (Ilhavandiffulu atoll at the
8-degree channel) is just 71 miles. In a previous article, I had detailed the
caste structure and problems which arose later, and how the islands managed to
survive these until the end of the British occupation. But we did not discuss
the happenings and history of the islands until the British took over, so let’s
take a look.
We know that the Chinese seafarers mentioned the islands
often in their annals. Chinese records, particularly from the Ming period, do
in fact contain descriptions of the Liu-shan, the Chinese term for both island
groups as well as the sea routes in the area. Certainly, the Cheng Ho voyages,
some if not all touched, but it is not clear which islands or which archipelago
it was. Several islands are mentioned by name, including three which have been
identified with the Laccadives, viz. Ma-li-ch'i (Maliku), Chia-p'ingnien
(Kalpeni) and An-tu-li (Androth). The Chinese were very careful and tried to
avoid these coral islands, if possible, due to the danger posed to the ship
hulls. But the Chinese did stop over often at Male down south.
This is the period when The Portuguese arrived at Calicut
and later constructed a fort at Cochin after battles at Calicut. But naturally,
they turned their eyes westward to the islands which they referred to with the
Baixo de Padua - Shallows (shoals) of Padua while navigational maps identified
the Padua and the Sesostris mud banks The Portuguese epoch is one the islanders
wish to forget for it was indeed a period of strife. It was also the locale
where one of Magellan's ships capsized. Nevertheless, most Portuguese accounts
term the Laccadives as the Mamale islands after Mamale marakkar (Ali Raja).
We read that their rule, though short, was characterized by
religious intolerance and acts of great brutality. So much so, a person nicknamed
Kathil anjakkaran (meaning - with bored ears) was sent to the Amini island by
the Kolathiri Raja. This person kept the Portuguese happy with booze and then
fed them snake venom poisoned wine (wonder if there were any snakes in the
island, and how they got there?) thus decimating the entire Portuguese garrison.
This event was later commemorated at the Pambanpalli ("Snake Mosque")
at the Pamban parambu where the poison is said to have been prepared. But it
was to exact massive retribution from the Franks, who in 1549-50 retaliated by
massacring over 400 Amini Islanders including the Qazi, Abu-Bakr, who is still
revered among Mappilas as a martyr. There are mentions of at least two
further massacres by the Portuguese, again on Chetlat Island, but apparently, no
further attempts were made to establish permanent Portuguese military
settlements. Zainuddin Makhdum also refers to these events, in his Tuhfat ul
Mujahideen. Sometime in the medieval period, the Kolathunad Raja turned over
control to the Arakkal Bevi or the Ali Raja of Cannanore.
The Malikku (Minicoy) island was however largely disregarded
until the time the Marakkars started to prowl the seas. It appears that the
Malikku island was targeted by the Marakkars and the islanders appealed to the
Cannanore chieftains for help. Logan mentions that Minicoy was "surrendered
by them to the Cannanore House on condition of protection being afforded to
them against the Kottakkal Kunjali Marakkars, the famous Malayali pirates who
used to harry the island periodically”.
Though the Portuguese had established themselves at Goa by
the end of the sixteenth century and generally controlled the region, the Ali
Rajas of Arakkal had by then arranged overlordship of the Laccadive Islands,
paying a peshkash or tribute of 6000 panams to the Chirakkal Raja. As time,
passed The Ali Raja rule became increasingly oppressive and independent after
the Kolathiri dominance declined. Taxation was steadily increased and the
islanders were subjected to a series of crippling monopolies imposed by Cannanore.
The Ali Rajas offered no protection and the islanders consequently suffered
raids by both Indian and European pirates. In fact, we can see that - During
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries English, French and Irish corsairs
(including the infamous William Kidd) descended on the Laccadives where they
spent their time "ravishing women, murdering men, burning houses and
behaving in a most villainous manner"
In 1786 the people of the northern islands of Amini, Chetlat
and Kiltan rose in protest against the harshness of Arakkal rule in general,
and against the coir monopoly in particular. Anyway, things were quite bad and
somebody decided that Tipu Sultan could be a savior, an answer to their
problem. Two boats belonging to the influential Kulap and Porakat families managed
to sail to Mangalore in 1783, where, they disposed of their coir to Tipu. The
Bibi sent her men to the islands to take revenge on these families and this
finally resulted in a revolt at the islands. The Karyakkar Abdul Khadir was put
in chains and the leaders sailed to Mangalore to offer their allegiance to
Tipu. As Ellis explains – Tipu, however, was by this time once more on friendly
terms with the Bibi, and tried to persuade them to return to their allegiance
to her. All his endeavors proving unsuccessful, he, at length, in I787,
accepted the offer of the islanders and granted in compensation to the
Cannanore family a jaghir from the Chirakkal territories. Sheik Hassan was
appointed as his Monegar and a period of calm prevailed.
After the Anglo Mysore wars, the East India Company and
later the British Crown became masters of the islands, when Tipu ceded all his
acquisitions to the English. Interestingly the southern islands passed to the
EIC in 1791 after the loss of Malabar and the Northern islands in 1799 after
the fall of Seringapatam. This division in administration continued in the
British bureaucracy as well, with the Amindivis, administered under South
Kanara and the southern islands under Malabar. The British initially allowed
the Arakkal Beebi to retain the Laccadives and Minicoy on the condition that
she paid an annual tribute, to the EIC.
Things went from bad to worse, and as the power of the Ali
Rajas waned, the annual peshkash fell into arrears; and living standards at the
islands declined rapidly. Finally, in 1861 the British stepped in and
sequestrated the islands for a period of five years and in 1875 they were permanently
sequestrated, though the Ali Rajas continued to enjoy a nominal sovereignty
until 1908.
During the first world war, the German battleship Emden was
around. Ellis tells us that the German Cruiser Emden operated off the
Laccadives for a short time in September in October 1914 and sank several (Six
- I believe) vessels on the trade routes which ran north and south of Minicoy.
Several lifeboats and some wreckage had washed up on Kalpeni.
Stevens, Mills and Barry were tasked to prepare
recommendations on the Laccadive islands. They opined thus “These islands
which are sparsely inhabited coral strips assume strategic importance from the
air point of view if we find we cannot retain all the facilities we require in
India. In such circumstances, they would be essential for our air reinforcement
and transport route to Australia, New Zealand and the Far East”. All that
was needed was to provide adequate navigational aids and an emergency landing
strip by making use of the Laccadive Islands. They concluded- Since we
cannot assume that the successor States in India, even if they remain
Dominions, will give us continued and full co-operation in the provision of the
necessary facilities for the air transport route to the Far East, we must
re-ensure by means of an alternative. The only alternative is the retention of
the Laccadive Islands. We therefore conclude that legislative provision should
be made for the transfer of the Laccadive Islands from the Government of Madras
to the Administration of H.M.G. (Her majesty’s Government) in the United
Kingdom.
During continuing negotiations, the committee was then
notified that the islands were not up for discussion as they were part of
Malabar (and Amini part of S Canara)- As regards the Laccadive Islands the
Committee were informed that they formed part of the Madras Presidency: in
these circumstances, they agreed that it would be necessary to seek by
negotiation any facilities that we might require for their use for strategic
and defense purposes. On 1st July 1947, the Air Ministry wrote
to the India Office, noting the decision in regard to the Laccadive Islands,
and requesting that the approval of the Govt of India be sought for a
reconnaissance of the Islands with a view to the installation of navigational
equipment and if possible, the construction of a landing strip there. In due
course, Lord Mountbatten sounded Pandit Nehru informally on the subject,
reporting on 19th July that he had spoken to Nehru who was ‘quite
friendly and said there was no objection to an official approach being made though
he could not commit himself until all implications had been considered’.
However, the situation with respect to the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands were different. Jinnah representing Pakistan, while disinterested
on the Laccadives in spite of it being a majority Muslim territory,
was ambivalent on the Andamans. He insisted on ownership of the Andamans as it
was strategically en route to East Pakistan. At the same time, Australia wanted
it transferred to HMG due to its strategic importance but Nehru and the Indian
negotiators flatly refused. As the situation became increasingly acrimonious, a final decision was taken to award it to India on the grounds that the INA had been
in possession of the islands obtaining it from the Japanese and because India had
a strong emotional connection to A&N due to the huge numbers of convicts
incarcerated there (Kala pani), over the years. It was a bitter pill for Jinnah
to swallow.
In spite of all this, the worst mistake committed by the team, busy with the main partition discussions, was I guess, the neglect of the Chagos
islands (Diego Garcia) and the Coco (Keeling) Islands. The former was
appropriated by the British and leased to the US as we know, while the latter
sitting to the North of the Andamans became Burmese property, where the Chinese since then, established a SIGINT station. Both have become strategic military locations
these days.
Back to the declaration of independence - As far as the
islanders of Lacadives were concerned, they knew about it many months later. A
lovely article by Suresh Thomas, provides some detail. As I read therein, one Chekkekeel
Khalid who had gone to Calicut arrived back at the islands with the news after
the monsoons, in Sept/Oct 1947, and only much later was the tricolor hoisted.
Now to the role of the Mudaliars and Travancore. As
Laccadives were administered by Malabar and S Kanara, there is little justification for ships going out from Travancore. Also, in June 1947, Travancore represented
by Sir CP, her Dewan was actually duking it out with the British and Indian
administrators, even considering allying with Pakistan (See my article for
further details). By August, Sir CP had returned to Madras to recuperate
and prepare for his world tours. Considering this background, it is unlikely that the Maharaja of
Travancore deputed a ship to the Laccadives to hoist a flag, purportedly, after being exhorted by Sardar Patel through the Mudaliar brothers. AR Mudaliar came to Travancore as the vice-chancellor of its
university much later, but until 1949, he was the Dewan of Mysore and so his
and his brother’s role in this matter, is circumspect.
Another report mentioned that the collector of revenue at
Travancore had been contacted by Patel (VP Menon is not mentioned) who then
sent a boat to Kavaratti to hoist a flag. All articles conclude by stating that a
Pakistani ship which came by, saw the Indian flag hoisted and went back. Then again, one should note that the transfer of naval assets had not been fully completed in
August 1947, so the possibility of Pakistan sending one of the three frigates
they eventually obtained, in order to check out the situation at Laccadives in
August, after sailing for approximately two days to cover the 900 miles
distance, seems unfeasible. Certainly, Jinnah a shrewd politician would not have
chanced armed conflict at that juncture, in my opinion.
Anyway, on August 15, 1947, India became independent. The Madras
Presidency became the Madras State and a part of the Indian Union. As a
consequence, the Malabar and South Canara became Indian districts.
Dr Pookoya provides the actual sequence of events in his
book - A few odams that reached in the end of September that year (1947) told the news that India was free from British Raj. But changes in Administration was much delayed and the Amin rule continued without any change. Trade with Calicut, Cannanore and Mangalore continued through Dallals. The Lakshadweep was then known as Laccadive Minicoy and Amindivi Islands, which was included along with Kerala under the Madras State. On 4th August 1950, the first unit of Indian National Congress was formed at Kalpeni Island by P.I.Pookoya, who was a freedom fighter, who celebrated first Independence Day of August 15th at Kalpeni Island in 1950. Sri S.V. Sayedkoya Thangal of Androth Island was nominated as Member of Madras Legislative Council (MLC) from Laccadive, Minicoy & Amindives in 1950. The Laccadive, Minicoy & Amindivi Islands came under Union Territory of Indian Union on 1st November 1956. Development was very slow & sluggish during that period. The British flag was flying on the Minicoy Light House till 1st April 1956.
At Minicoy lighthouse on 1st April 1956 British flag was replaced by the Indian flag. An Administrative Office was started in Calicut at a rented house at Puthiyara, on 1st November 1956. U R Panikkar took over charge but was replaced by S. Mony ICS, on the 8th of November1956.
Thus, on 1st November 1956, Travancore-Cochin
joined with the Malabar District of Madras State to form the new state of
Kerala. In accordance with the promulgation of the States Reorganization Act, the islets and atolls were all combined to collectively form a union territory. With all this background, I find it difficult to accept reports of the
deputation of a ship that then arranged for the hoisting of the Indian
tricolor, just after independence. It could still be a possibility, but I doubt
it.
That said, the foregoing provides anybody interested in a
better understanding of the history of those lovely islands. I can only hope
that they are unaffected by divisive politics and religious animosity.
References
Kalpeni Island History, People and Culture – Dr CG Pookoya
Lakshadweep – Theodore Gabriel
A short account of the Laccadive Islands and Minicoy – R H Ellis
Cornered in a world of their own (Fountain Ink) – Suresh P Thomas
Travancore’s Pakistan Intrigues, 1946-47
Mammali Marakkar
The Umbrella riots (LivehistoryIndia)
6 comments:
Lymerica or Damarica in Periplus? I thought Schoff translated it as Damarica (Tamizhakam)
Thanks Arby,
Lionel Casson explains the error created when Wilfred Harvey Schoff's 1912 translation of the Periplus used the term "Damirica" instead of "Limyrikê", wrongly. The "Damirice" of Tabula Peutingeriana is over a thousand miles from Limyrikê.
https://books.google.com/books?id=qQWYkSs51rEC&pg=PA213#v
Oh, thanks. Nitpicking here, on usage of Franks. I think the reference is Parangi/Firangi that Arabs used for Europeans. This as I understand was because Crusaders were mainly Frankish and spoke French. Apart from the ruling family, Franks had limited involvement in Portugal. Suevi/Visigothic, likely given the history.
Excellent post, as usual. Thanks.
True, Arby
In this context, Frank is Al-Franji from the Arabic usage of the Pardesi traders or Paranki which became firangi. Early texts termed them as Franks, due to the above, a term which I use at times.
Maddy, nice article. But I had one question - aren't the Cocos Keeling islands part of Australia and not Burma?https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocos_(Keeling)_Islands
Sandeep,
My mistake. Cocos-Keeling is as you mentioned rightly, Australian. Coco to the north of the Andamans, which I was referring to, is Burmese. The Keeling in brackets is incorrect, and I have corrected it. This Australian Keeling island is west of Christmas island (I had written about it some months ago - https://maddy06.blogspot.com/2018/02/the-christmas-island-revolt-1942.html
Coco island Burma - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coco_Islands
thanks, Sandeep..
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